This prediction is not based on a flight of fancy, but on what is happening out there, what is currently on offer and what is planned throughout the year: contemporary ceramics will be the focus.

Ceramics are not so much making a significant comeback, rather eyes and minds are once more appreciating this practice. Ceramics were notable for their greater inclusion in the recent Art Basel Miami and Design Miami. Anecdotally, the work exhibited held its own well against digital media, installations and the ephemeral. Some might say, from a trend aspect and from a commercial perspective, this may be a turning point for the growing acceptance of ceramics as a serious collectable art form.

I don’t intend to follow any shallow trends or pursue the well -trodden “what’s hot; what’s not” trail of the art world, but I am interested in drawing attention to what is swirling around us, organically and genuinely. In 2015 there is much to see and think about with contemporary ceramics.

Clay 2 at Utopia Art in Danks St was what got me thinking. There was a Clay (1) last year, an exhibition showcasing contemporary ceramics as a way to pay homage to the late, great Marea Gazzard(the Estate of which Utopia represents). Clay looks set to become an annual event and given the standard of what is on display now, that would be most welcome.

Gazzard was a major force in the recognition of craft in Australia. She spent her life working with clay and bronze, and promoting the potential for Australian craft. Her integrity as an artist and craft advocate was foremost throughout her long career. It is fitting that her legacy is celebrated as Clay 1, 2 …

Eloise Rankin, whose work was a standout at the 2014 NAS Post Grad show presents more work from the same series,” I am my mother’s daughter”. It tells a personal story of nostalgic yearnings for home using small scale porcelain pots and bowls placed in hand crafted boxes, against backdrops of fabric swatches from her mother’s quilting samples.

You may have seen the work ofGlenn Barkley the ceramicist, as opposed to Glenn Barkley the curator, in Glazed and Confused at Hazelhurst Regional Gallery, which has only just closed. This project began a couple of years ago with Lynda Draper, a teacher at Ceramics Design Studio Sydney TAFE who invited established artists to undertake a residency to experiment with clay while giving them access to the technical knowledge of the Studio staff and students, and specialist equipment and facilities. The resulting cross-pollination of industry knowledge, concepts, media and processes produced an exciting and varied response from the artists which was present in Glazed and Confused.

Barkley has thrown himself into the potter’s world and onto the potter’s wheel, and found a practice which he is keen to push and explore. What he produced for Hazelhurst has been taken further for Clay 2. The works are tremendous: seemingly roughened, yet incredibly detailed with painstaking additions and extraneous ‘bits’. With loopy handles which serve no purpose and stuck-on bits which droop and flop, overall punctured with tiny holes, the works feel like a loosely knitted or crocheted object, which would collapse on touch. Yet, fired up and cured, they are pots and jugs and vases to be held, used and cherished.

One thing about making pots is the physical effort required: pushing, rolling and kneading tough clay, to make it malleable and workable, and taking command of the wheel, requires strength and determination. Donna Greens’ works illustrate this physicality. These are not modest pots, but large scale, seemingly free form and random organic vessels. They are shaped, then poked and pummelled by Thomas’ fingers, hands, elbows to push the shape into something else. She calls it her “gestural freedom”. Her glazing process is equally considered and the results are wonderfully complex and nuanced. Her work does enshrine that understanding that, for potters, all must be technically spot on, otherwise it fails in the firing.

Unfortunately the show will have finished by the time of the major Art Month 2015 experience, The Art of Eating: Ceramics, Food & Conversation. This dinner, held in Utopia Art, is focussed on using ceramics and not just looking at them, because “the joy of beautiful objects is only truly felt through use.” Liane Rossler and Brett Stone have been commissioned to create the ceramic tableware for the evening – you get to eat off them and then take one piece of each home.

More ceramics in Danks St at the moment. A couple of works from the Hermannsburg Potters, known for their delightful painted vessels with the figurine stoppers. Annette Larkin Fine Art has a couple from the Gary Sands Collection. Peter Pinson, now art dealer, no longer gallerist (another one closed – disappointing) also has several available.

OlsenIrwin, through Rex Irwin, represents some of Australia’s leading ceramicists: Gwyn Hansen-Piggot, Prue Venables and Sandy Lockwood, who is exhibiting work in April 2015. Rex has never shied away from the aesthetic authority of the humble pot.

Ross Longmuir from Planet Furniture has built his successful, enduring business on his respect for the crafted object, be it ceramics, textiles or furniture design. As with all the pieces and artists he works with, Longmuir has always pursued fine crafting, natural elements, integrity, sustainability and style. Since 1991, many a ceramicist has launched a successful career through his representation.

There will be lots more talking and thinking about ceramics this year than has been for a while:

The Australian Ceramic Triennale is being held in July in Canberra. This is the 14th The event attracts leading national and international industry leaders, ceramics practitioners, educators, collectors, critics and cultural theorists to a full conference program which includes key note speakers, individual artist’s presentations, master classes, exhibitions, a trade fair and a potters’ market.

And to coincide with this international event and to mark a major milestone of having notched up 50 years of teaching ceramics, the National Art School in Sydney is hosting a major exhibition, New Disciples: 50 year of ceramic It is guest-curated by curator and ceramicist Glenn Barkley and aims to explore the importance of ceramics as an art form in Australian contemporary culture.

Central to this exhibition will be the opportunity to articulate and acknowledge the significant contributions Peter Rushforth has made to Australian ceramic practices over generations, as a teacher and mentor at NAS. There must be something in a life devoted to earthly elements, as Rushforth continues on, well into his 90s.

And of particular significance and note for 2015, is the Sidney Myer Fund Australian Ceramic Award hosted by Shepparton Art Museum (SAM) and for which applications are currently being sought. This is worth a more than respectable $50,000. Although around since 1997, SAM has rethought the potential for the Award, to maximise its impact and encourage “longer term career development opportunities for Australian ceramicists, more strategic collecting for the Art Museum and allow for greater depth to the [associated award] exhibition and publishing.”

There will be 5 recipients of a portion of the Award, who will each receive a stipend to produce a body of work for the major Award exhibition. One of these recipients will be awarded the jackpot of $50,000 and their work will be acquired into the SAM Collection. That is happening in August – keep an eye out.

The argument that prevailed in the ’70s about form over function, and craft being relegated to a lesser platform than the so-called ‘finer arts’ is just no longer relevant. What I believe is more relevant, is the increasing need in our digital, virtual, easily replicable world, for the unique hand-made item which retains a strong connection to the natural world; an item which allows us to pause and consider moment of beauty in daily life. Ceramics do that and 2015 offers the opportunities to celebrate this.